For those who might be interested…
May 30th, 2006- This is our neighborhood.
- We’re lot 49 in Greenview Village.
- Here’s our house. We selected Elevation B.
So, as the post below this one briefly indicated, for those of you who didn’t already know (is there anyone reading this that didn’t already know?), Raquel and I bought a house last month. Ever since I relocated to Texas five years ago, it has been a dream of mine to own my own home and through my personal growth across the last five years, Raquel’s and my marriage, and a series of some fine “blessings” we received between the middle and the end of last year, the dream started to turn into something slightly more within reach than it had ever been. Raquel didn’t necessarily share the dream of mine up unil just a few days before we actually signed the contract, but as we sit here a month later, I think it’s safe to say that she’s about as excited as I am, if not moreso.
When we bought the house, it was my intention to do something with this web site with the purpose of chronicling the progress of the build of the house, but it took me a long time to get stuff together for that. But here we are now. So, what I thought I’d do, is just give a little back story with how things came to be and we will share pictures of the progress.
So, until part two of the Story of the House, go check out the photo album entitled our new house over at the new photos page (there’s a permanent link on the sidebar, over there on the right). Note the photo titles and the captions which will tell you the story behind the pictures. Be amazed by how much progress they’ve made in the last two weeks. Most importantly, keep coming back. You can be sure that the photo album will be updated regularly until the day we move in, and then some.
Until next time…thanks for stopping by.
A new blogging platform, and a new look. The picture up top is courtesy of yours truly. Yes, I, Patrick, took that picture. I am the man. I’m not sure how I feel about the color scheme yet, but that’s part of the reason I moved us over to this platform. I have much more room to customize things the way I like them. Bye-bye to Blogger.
Anyhow…stay tuned…we will have an all-new photo gallery with pictures of the new house posted before this week is up. You can count on it.
Love to all!
Hey folks…
I thought I’d throw a bone out here to let everyone know that patrick and raquel dot com has not been neglected. Rather, it’s in an “in between” stage. We’re trying to figure out what we should do with this site. I was thinking of making it more of a photo blog or something to that effect. Maybe I’ll throw it out there for your suggestions. What do you think.
The thing is, I’ve got a blog. I’m fairly decent at updating that. Much better than I am about doing anything here. But that’s more about me than us…you know? So, I just do it over there. Raquel is a busy lady and not nearly into the blogging thing as much as I am. So, she just doesn’t do it.
But we still want to keep you posted on what’s up with us. So, what’s the best way to do that?
What are your thoughts?
We’re still alive. Just haven’t had a whole lot of time to keep up the regular posting over here. I wrote some reflections on 2005 that I thought I’d share with you who might read this.
I just got finished reading this post I made last year on January 4. It’s kind of interesting to read that and see that almost none of what I expressed in that post was remotely accomplished. By contrast, though, 2005 was easily the most eventful of recent years. A week or two ago, Raquel and I were talking about the past year and about the journey it was. I think that “journey” is a fitting word for it too. 2005 was marked by some incredible highs and some remarkable lows. We learned a lot about ourselves, each other, and the faithfulness of God. While I wouldn’t
want to have to relive a lot of it (there were some pretty hairy moments), I think I can honestly say that I am truly thankful for all of what transpired over the last year. And while pondering what my goals were at this time last year, I’m kinda glad that none of them came to be. That gives me something to shoot for this year. On the other hand, things that did happen…well, I wish I would have had the foresight to write about them.
I started wrting this at about 9:30 tonight…it is now almost 11:30. I must say that I am quite overwhelmed to the point of not knowing how to finish writing a coherent entry. Not emotionally, per se (okay, maybe just a little bit). Rather, I am just simply amazed about how big our God is and how impeccably He continues to work everything for the good of those who love Him.
Some things worth mentioning:
- Genesis Metro (and its people)
- One truly joyous year of marriage completed
- Tough times, where God showed us who He is
- Faith learned, not necessarily lived
- Old friends reconnected
- New friends, lives changed
- Worship
- God
- Love
Out with the old, in with the new. It should be interesting to see what happens now.
Here’s to a new year and a new beginning. We’ll try to pay more attention to this site as the year moves forward. Thanks for reading.
Patrick has finished uploading the pics from our vacation. Click here to see them. Patrick wrote a daily journal (below). it’s pretty cool.
Enjoy… and leave us a comment.
~~~~~
Day Nine
~~~~~
Day 10
How many of you remembered that Monday was our one year anniversary? For our anniversary, we decided that we would spend a night in the city at the Waldorf Astoria hotel, meaning Monday would have us saying our goodbyes to Uncle Bobby and Aunt Adele. We woke up around 10:00 or so, and started packing. With Sunday having been such a long day, we took our time in getting ready to go, enjoying what time we had left with Aunt Adele.We decided that we would splurge a little bit for our anniversary and call for a Towncar to pick us up and take us to the hotel rather than riding the train in. The car arrived at 2:00, but it wasn’t a Towncar, like we had requested. It was a stretch limo. What a way to enjoy our anniversary! We got to the hotel around 3:00, got all checked in, and arrived to a nice room overlooking Park Avenue that had a beautiful bouquet of roses for Raquel (courtesy of yours truly).Monday’s agenda included the Museum of Modern Art, Rockefeller Center, trying again to go to Serendipity 3, and an extended visit to Times Square seeing as we hadn’t yet spent much more than about five minutes there.MoMA was what you would expect from a museum of that calliber. Truly magnificent art was displayed from the likes of Picasso, Dali, Van Gogh, Pollock, Cézanne, Pissaro, and even the Apple Corporation (they had an iPod on display). They even had the original of one of my all-time favorite works of art, Van Gogh’s The Starry Night. It was so cool to have seen that.
We had a few celebrity sightings too, the first of whom was Conan O’Brien after leaving MoMA. Even though it was Labor Day, he did tape a show and he was walking up 6th Avenue afterwards. Raquel saw him before I did, but we weren’t close enough to say hi to him. We walked from there to Rockefeller Center where we enjoyed a nice time with each other, having some drinks and appetizers, and taking a lot of pictures.
From there, it was over to Serendipity where we had a very nice dinner and dessert. We waited for about thirty minutes during which Raquel had celebrity sightings two and three with Venus and Serena Williams, who were leaving. I was in the men’s room so I missed them. Oh well. Being at Serendipity was a highlight for Raquel being that she had wanted to visit this establishment for a long time.
After dinner we hailed a taxi for my first ever NYC taxi ride, and made our way down to Times Square again. This time, we had an opportunity to actually enjoy the sights and sounds taking our time to walk up and down. We stopped in a few souvenier shops, saw the MTV studios, the ABC studios, and walked up to the Ed Sullivan Theatre where David Letterman tapes his show. That was cool to have seen all that.
We walked back to the hotel and turned the page on the first year of our marriage, reminiscing about the greatness of what went on a year prior and everything that followed our wedding day up to our anniversary night. What a perfect close to the most perfect first year ever. I said it in one of my entries last week, but I’ll say it again: If the years that follow are as sweet as the first one was, ours will be the greatest ever. I have no reason to think that it won’t be.
~~~~~
Day Eleven
Home again, but not without a couple last minute stops. We had wanted to get out to the Statue of Liberty on our first trip into the city last week, but didn’t get to Battery Park in time. After stops at the NBC Studio Store and standing outside the Today Show broadcast, the CBS Store next to the Ed Sullivan Theater, and at Rupert Jee’s Hello Deli, we headed to the subway for Battery Park. While waiting to cross the street we found ourselves standing right behind Max Weinberg of E Street Band and Conan O’Brien bandleader fame. He was kind enough to respond to my hello and stopped to take a picture with me, despite his being short on time. He even complemented my More Cowbell t-shirt.We arrived at Battery Park, and headed straight for the Statue of Liberty Ferry. We didn’t have a whole lot of time since we had to be back at the hotel to get our bags for the airport by 2:00, so stayed on the ferry for the entire trip, not getting off at Liberty or Ellis Islands. I’ll let the pictures speak for themselves when they get posted.We stopped for a hot dog after getting off the ferry and darted for the subway, now pressed for time. We took one last subway ride, ending at Grand Central Station, snapped a few pictures while practically running through it, got our bags at the hotel and hailed a taxi for the airport.Of course we arrived home safely without incident.
~~~~~
We’re home. Bleh. I guess it’s back to regular life now.
Tomorrow night I’ll wrap up the New York blogs with days nine, ten, and eleven…the best days of the trip.
We went to a little village called Cold Spring Harbor for lunch with Dad and Roberta before they left for the airport. Afterwards we walked around the village in and out of the various gift shops that were way outside of my demographic (lots of shops for the ladies, none for wannabe rockstars). We headed from there into downtown Huntington and did some more walking around and Raquel bought some sandals that are dead sexy.
We went out for dinner tonight at this restaurant I haven’t forgotten since the last time we visited here a few years ago. Have you ever had a white pizza? Yeah…I don’t think so…not unless it came from this place.
Another round of Hold ‘Em finished out the night which found me as the big money winner. I kinda felt bad take the money of a copule 12 year olds, but they wouldn’t have it any other way. Whatever. There’s $25 I didn’t have before.
Right now we’re watching some US Open action and the Sudafed is wearing off. I guess I’ll go to bed now.
Tomorrow we’re meeting up with Drew and Tara hopefully and we’ll go to Central Park. I have a hunch that the last couple of days we have here will be spare with the whole blogging thing, but I’ll do what I can.
Good night.
We strolled around the grounds, checked out the various merch booths, went to the practice courts to watch the various amateurs warm up, watched part of a match on one of the side courts (outside the three stadiums, they had several courts with some of the “lesser knowns” playing) that was thoroughly entertaining. The majority of that crowd was there to see the favored Brazilian Gustavo Kuerten. You’d have thought we were at a Brazilian soccer match with all the Brazil flags, jerseys, green and yellow wigs, and the like. The match was very good and one of the more popular draws outside of the stadiums, but the most entertaining part of it, for me anyhow, were the Brazilian fans with their loud roars and “olé” songs.
Our tickets were for the Arthur Ashe stadium and we got lucky with some great matches in that stadium. We watched Lindsay Davenport very easily defeat Pauline Parmentier in two straight sets, 6-1, 6-1, which was followed up by an incredible match that pitted the great Andre Agassi against the giant Ivo Karlovic who has an absolutely ungodly serve. It was a long, intense match that had Agassi on the better end of it, winning in three sets, 7-6, 7-6, 7-6.
At the end of that match, we had been there for about eight hours and seen everything there was to see, so we headed back up toward Penn Station.
~~~~

After dinner, we stepped across the street to a dessert place called Ferrara. We didn’t know it when we went there, but we were going to perhaps the most famous pastry place on the island of Manhattan. We took a seat, and both ordered a cannoli and cappucino. Now, like the pizza, if you’ve not had a cannoli in New York, you’ve not had a cannoli. I first discovered cannolis when we visited Aunt Adele and Uncle Bobby here on Long Island three years ago. I fell in love with these things back then, having never had them before. The cannolis that Aunt Adele gets from her pasticceria are amazing, however, they pale in comparison to what we had last night. It was just amazing.
From dessert, we walked up Mulberry Street through the rest of Little Italy, stopping for cheap souveniers, and stumbled upon Soho on our way to catch the subway back up to Penn Station. Soho is just what you would expect from its name…a trendy shopping area. It was cool to be able to say now that I’ve been to Soho. After ducking into some shops, we dropped into the subway station, and listened to a panhandler play some decent tunes on his guitar as we waited for our train. We got off at 34th and Broadway (site of the World’s Largest Store) and hoofed it over to catch the LIRR back to Huntington.
We got in late, miscalculating the tip for the taxi driver, thereby stiffing him, and resigned to rest after an incredibly long, but extremely fulfilling day.
~~~~~
Day Seven
We slept until about 10:30 this morning laid around until about 11:30. Today was another lazy day. We tagged along with Aunt Adele, Joey, and Dylan (the aforementioned 12-year-old-Hold-’Em-playing cousins) to the mall to get some errands done, bumped into Raquel’s Aunt Madelane by chance, and had a late lunch at California Pizza Kitchen (which was somewhat ironic to me for some reason).
I had a pretty rough allergy attack this afternoon so when we returned from the mall and getting some errands, I napped for an hour or so.
We BBQ’d for dinner tonight and were joined by Drew, Tara, baby Jonathan, EJ (Joey’s brother), Joey, Dylan, and Aunt Madelane. It was a rich time and we celebrated Aunt Adele and Uncle Bobby’s 43rd wedding anniversary. Forty three years to our one. I figure if the following years are as sweet as the first was, the next forty two will be a cake walk. Bring ‘em on, I say.
The boys fired up a round of Hold ‘Em and Drew and I bought in. EJ’s buddy, Rich, came over and joined in as well. I stayed in for a while, but these kids are really cavalier in their playing so I didn’t stay long. That and we kept raising the blinds which didn’t give me much of a chance to stay in long.
This morning as we were slowly waking, Raquel had to remind me that our vacation is winding to a close and this is punctuated by Dad and Roberta’s departure tomorrow. Since I met them a few years ago, this has been the longest opportunity I’ve had to spend with my parents-in-law. I have truly enjoyed the opportunity to be with them this week, and feel so blessed to have been welcomed into their family.
Tomorrow we will stay around the house again, getting what quality time we can before they leave in the afternoon. I will miss them. My anticipation of the couple days comes with a little bit of a bittersweet taste with the pending end of the vacation, but I shall live the next days to the full.